5 Out Motion Offense - Cutters

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This 5 out motion offense is an extremely simple offense to teach that could be used for a number of reasons.

  1. Primary offense. Throughout my varsity career, we utilized this offense with great success because it opened up the lanes for dribble penetration and cuts that allowed us to utilize our team's quickness. As a freshman in high school, I saw Cedar Rapids Prairie win the Iowa state championship using this as their primary offense.

  2. Easy To Teach - This offense could very easily be taught in one day!

  3. Delay offense. If you want to hold the ball until you get a lay up or the final shot to end the quarter, this offense is ideal for those situations.

  4. Foundation for any motion offense at any level. This offense can be used as a building block to teach your players basket cuts, back cuts, and how to react to dribble penetration.

  5. Great For Youth Teams - Great foundation as mentioned in #4 and you can teach more options as the team progresses.

Rules

  1. Pass then basket cut. After the basket cut is made, fill the open spot along the baseline.

    Player 1 Cuts and fills the opposite baseline spot.

  2. If the player in front of you cuts, replace him.

    Player 3 replaces Player 1.

    Player 5 replaces Player 3.
  3. Cut Only When You Pass The Ball or when the player with the ball is looking at you.

  4. The ball should only be dribbled to improve floor balance or beat the player.

  5. Avoid passing to the corner & keep the ball above the free throw line extended.

    If you're coaching a youth team, I'd also be hesitant towards placing this rule. With youth teams, you want to allow more freedom.

Teaching Points To Better Execute The Offense:

These are some things that you will want to teach your players along the way. Be careful on teaching these points all at once. Otherwise, it can overwhelm them.

  • All cuts are finished at the rim.

  • Passer must watch the cutter all the way though. This helps with timing for the next player filling the vacant spot.

  • When replacing the cutter, wait until the player with the ball is about done looking at the cutter. This will help with timing and setting up the defender for a back cut or straight cut.

  • Back cut when the defender is near 3-point line. Some coaches like to say on the 3-point line, 1 step from the 3-point line, or 1 foot from the 3-point line. It's up to you to decide what works best for you.

  • Always have the ball in triple threat and be ready to dribble penetrate. This offense can sometimes lull the defense to sleep which gives the ball handler opportunities to attack the basket.



Example of an Offensive Sequence

Remember, to execute this offense all you need to know are the 5 rules above. Those rules explain what to do in virtually every situtation. With that said, there are little teaching points that make this offense more effective. Below you'll find a sample sequence to help you see how everything fits together. As you go through the sequeunce, you'll notice that the 5 rules are always followed.


It is very important to keep spacing for dribble penetration and cutters.

  1. Players 2 & 3 should be near the free throw line extended.
  2. Players 4 & 5 should be in the corners.

  1. Player 1 passes the ball to Player 2 on the wing.
  2. After the pass, Player 1 basket cuts straight to the rim. Then, fills the spot in the opposite corner.
  3. Player 3 fills the spot on the top of the key.
  4. Player 5 fills the wing.

  1. The defender guarding Player 3 pressures the pass and steps to the 3-point line.
  2. Player 3 back cuts. Player 2 looks to pass the ball if Player 3 is open.
  3. Player 3 fills the open spot along the baseline.
  4. Player 5 fills the top of the key.
  5. Player 1 fills the wing.

  1. Player 2 passes the ball to Player 5.
  2. Player 2 basket cuts and replaces open spot along baseline.
  3. Player 4 fills the spot.

  1. The pass is not open, so Player 4 back cuts.

  1. After Player 4 cleared the lane, Player 5 looks to the opposite wing at Player 1.
  2. Player 1 basket cuts
  3. Player 3 replaces.

  1. Player 5 passes to Player 3.
  2. Player 5 basket cuts.
  3. Players 2 & 4 fill the open spots.
  4. Remember, Players 2 & 4 should not replace as soon as Player 5 basket cuts. They want to pause until Player 5 has almost reached the basket to ensure proper timing.

  1. Player 5 clears the lane.
  2. Player 3 dribble penetrates.
  3. Penetration is cut off. Player 3 kicks it out to Player 1 in the corner.

  1. Player 1 dribbles towards the wing to create floor balance.
  2. As Player 1 dribbles to the wing, Player 2 back cuts.
  3. Player 1 passes to Player 2 for a lay up.

Other Situations:

Pass To Corner
  1. Defender packs down near the lane in the corner to help on penetration and basket cuts.
  2. If the player in the corner is a slasher or scorer, you can pass him the ball and allow him to shoot or attack.

Prevent 5 second call
  1. Player 2 passes the ball to the corner to avoid the Player 5 second call and basket cuts.

  1. Player 5 immediately dribbles to the wing and looks to the top of the key to start the offense again.

What To Do With A Good Post Player
  1. If you have a good post player, you can give them permission to sit in the post for 2 seconds to try to get position.
  2. Player 1 passes to Player 2. Player 1 basket cuts.
  3. Player 1 cuts over to the post area to hold the position for 2 seconds.
  4. Player 3 hesitates to fill the spot until the post starts to clear. If Player 3 leaves too early, it can throw off the timing.

Related Articles & Products

Don Kelbick's Motion Offense - A Comprehensive Guide to Implementing a Motion Offense

The 5-Out Offense - Using Away Screens to Create Tons of Scoring Opportunities

The Billeter Rocket Offense with Ball Screens

Motion Offense For Youth Basketball

Fast Break Offense - Carolina


What do you think? Let us know by leaving your comments, suggestions, and questions...



Comments

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Joe O'Shea says:
4/9/2009 at 8:01:10 AM

does this also work when you play against zones? do you suggest any modifications if you were to run it against a zone?

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  1 reply  

Chris says:
2/9/2015 at 4:07:03 PM

No. You have to modify the cuts to seam cuts or "banana" cuts. After the pass, the cutter goes behind a defender's line of vision and camps in or near the lane for 1 or 1.5 seconds. Pass receiver should look to get him the ball. That forces the D to collapse and you can play inside out with kick passes to the arc for threes or dribble penetration.

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Joe Haefner says:
4/9/2009 at 10:45:52 AM

Hi Joe,

You can tweak things to make it work against a zone. You could have them fill spots rather than just through the lane. For example, when they cut, you could have them fill the mid post and/or the short corner.

We talk about this more in-depth in the Motion Offense eBooks and the audio interview included with the product.

Like
  1 reply  

Mike Terlizzi says:
1/22/2019 at 10:07:11 AM

Hi,

Love all your info. Have been following for years. Don't want to bore you, but want to give you some insight and see if you can provide advice.

I coach middle school boys. I generally have 3 or 4 kids that can play adequately, and the rest are new to the sport. We typically are not very competitive vs the teams that provide feeder programs. This year I really concentrated on the basics with them in an effort to not overwhelm them and hope to play some close games.

I used many of your drills during practice to get them making athletic moves and thinking about their options with the ball. On defense I have 2 tall kids and 3 athletic wing type of players. We implemented the 3-2 zone to keep things simplified. Defensively, we have been pretty solid.

On offense, we have a solid, undersized pg and some decent 3 point shooters. Down low we have a big who is just understanding how big he is, but misses many "easy" shots and quickly gets into foul trouble. We have made great strides and have actually taken a double digit lead into halftime 3 times this year. In each of those games, the other team has come back and beaten us...twice in overtime.

My main question for you revolves around halftime adjustments, and what I can do differently to get these kids to close out a game. They get stagnant on offense and forget how they scored to take the lead...or the other coach is adjusting better than I am. I'm concerned that because I never established a true identity on offense, they don't have anything to fall back on when the going gets tough.

Appreciate any feedback.

Like
  1 reply  

Jeff says:
2/3/2019 at 4:04:16 PM

Mike,

You're stunting their development. Teach them man-to-man defense and don't play zone. Ever. You'll give up a few wins, but their high school coach will thank you. The intensity and focus needed to play fundamental man to man defense will help carry them through closing out games.

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Joe O'Shea says:
4/9/2009 at 4:37:00 PM

Will get the e-book after the Easter holiday, but why is it best for the other 3 players to stand around rather than say exchanging on the weakside and/or having the strongside corner moving and replacing himself? Or would this be added in later after learning the basket cut?

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Mark Gannon says:
4/9/2009 at 5:53:04 PM

Do you have any specific set plays off this offense? What I really like is how it spreads the court. I coach a very basketball smart 8th grade girls with no true star.

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Joe Haefner says:
4/10/2009 at 8:13:06 AM

Joe,

That is certainly a possiblity. I have not tried that. I'm worried it could mess with the timing, but it could also make the offense more effective. Try it and see what happens. If you don't like it, you can always take it out.

Mark,

There are an infinite amount of plays you could do. Take some of the plays in our plays section or plays ebook. Start with 5 out, a pass and cut, then go from there.

http://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/plays.html

If you have not downloaded our free plays ebook, go here: http://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/freebooks.html

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leroy says:
4/13/2009 at 8:21:45 PM

can i stick a backscreen in and call it wildcats?

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Carlo Dorigoni says:
4/27/2009 at 3:04:44 PM

I've been forced to use this offense since 2 of my post players have been unable to attend a few games and tournaments.
I haven't been a fan of the 5-out because of being out of place to box out and rebound.
It is a perfect offense if you have a team that never misses. We practice collasping to box out on shot.
It has been working for my girls AAU JV team.

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Greg says:
11/13/2009 at 9:19:40 AM

I'm intrigued by the idea of a 5 out offense, but like the above poster, I'm worried about rebounding. What instructions should you give the kids for rebounding and court balance? Who should rebound and who should stay back?

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Jeff Haefner says:
11/13/2009 at 8:50:35 PM

Greg - I would always have the person at the top of the key responsible for getting back on defense. Everyone else should crash the boards!

Keep in mind that this spread offense will get lots of dribble drive penetration. That allows you to get lots of rebounds in the following ways...

1) The player driving gets close to the basket and if they miss, they are in good position for the put back rebound.

2) Teach their teammates to follow the player driving to the basket. Many times if you follow a player driving in for a lay up, you'll find the ball in your lap for a rebound. That's one of the best times to crash the boards.

If you emphasize rebounding, teach players to anticipate, and teach players where the ball is most likely to go, you can rebound very effectively with this offense.

If you really want to get good at rebounding, check out this book. Follow the advice there and you can rebound extremely well no matter what offense you run.
http://www.breakthroughbasketball.com/pr/rebounding.html

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Kevin says:
12/10/2009 at 8:57:54 PM

I ran this for 3 years with a few more wrinkles. I allowed the passer to either pass and cut or pass and screen away. The guy being screened would then either replace the screener or curl to the basket and then the same action would occur with replacing and floor balance.

I also liked the dribble hand off with the option to go backdoor or curl off the hand off. With these options, the defense would have to worry about more things happening.

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